Application Assignment 3: Case Study 1. Lanie Then PSY:3330 Childhood Psychopathology Dr. Denburg April 7, 2024 Case Study 1 Stephen Stall is a 9-year-old Caucasian male, who was brought to the clinic by his parents following displays of behavior that has made him difficult to control. Behaviors mentioned by his parents include not listening to his teacher, aggression toward his younger sister, running and riding from his parents, arguing with and yelling at his parents, not complying with his parents’ requests, tantrums involving crying, yelling, and punching objects. Based on the symptoms Stephen has shown, I would diagnose him with oppositional defiant disorder. Stephan refuses to comply with his parents’ commands, argues with his parents,…
According to “Herb Baumeister and the Horrors of Fox Hollow,” Herb Baumeister was the oldest of four children to the parents Herbert and Elizabeth Baumeister. Baumeister’s parents perceived him as being normal, except his love of watching documentaries about serial killers. One of Baumeister’s childhood friends recalls him as being a bit odd by recalling one of Baumeister’s favorite pass times which was to play with dead animals. On another occasion he recalls Baumeister leavening a dead bird on the teacher’s desk when the teacher was not looking. Baumeister’s antisocial behavior became more apparent as he got into his teenage years.…
Antisocial personality disorder is a common condition with a general population prevalence in men ranging from 1%. Second, it is associated with considerable co-morbidity, especially with other personality disorders, substance, and other Axis 1 conditions also with increased mortality, especially at a young age, largely because of reckless behavior. Finally, there are the attitudes of those with ASPD towards treatment. In addition to the likelihood of inheriting a difficult temperament, people with antisocial personality disorder often grow up in families where parenting is harsh and inconsistent, leading in to school truancy and low educational attainment. While watching the movie it is unclear if the parenting is inconsistent because we…
The individual identity is influenced by numerous factors, but the family is the primary group that influences behavior and personality. In this world of countless cultures, childhood development is implemented differently, such that it is based on the culture’s values. An individual’s behavior and personality is not only influenced by the values of a culture; but, also the family structure and forms of discipline. In childhood development, discipline consists of punishments and controls. Two predominant examples that differ in childhood development are Hispanic families and American families.…
Jones Family Report and Plan of Action A plan of action assists the case manager in providing direction and structure to a case. It helps in case evaluation, clients’ accountability, and in documenting the willingness of the clients to participate in the services provided and/or referred to by the agency. The action plan also provides goals and alternatives toward the resolution of the various challenges presented by the family/clients. In the presented scenario, the Jones family presents different issues which need to be dealt with.…
In the United States there are 2.2 million people incarcerated according to sentencing project. There have been few research studies on the effect on children with incarcerated parents. Research shows that children that see their parents incarcerated are more likely to be deviant in the future. Deviance is an act that goes against the social norm. There are factors that determine whether or not if a child is at higher risk of becoming incarcerated in the future.…
Measures Two population indicators related to disruptive behaviors served as the outcome variables for this study and will be derived from independent data-collection systems: (1) the number of children with problematic disruptive behavior recorded by all district hospitals and sub-district health care center and (2) the behavioral score and the number of children who score above the clinical cut-off of the Eyberg Child Behavior Inventory (ECBI; Eyberg & Pincus, 1999). Both outcomes were measured one month before implementation of the intervention (pre-intervention: T1) and one year after implementation (post-intervention: T2).…
“In contrast to an authoritative parent, Mark Rubin and Kelly Benjamin state, “…authoritarian parenting negatively predicts self-esteem and emotional well-being and positively predicts anxiety, depression, sense of inadequacy, symptomatic problems, risk to self and others, and suicidal ideation” (Rubin, Benjamin). Family members have a very important role in a child life. A sibling, if one is present, and a parent(s) are always around. If a child comes home and feels like they have no one to talk to, it forces them to hold everything all in. The age of the child makes a significant role as well.…
The bio-psycho-social model is not only an important model when studying child risk behavior, but it is the model that most researchers focus on when studying antisocial behavior trajectories. Many children grow up in single parent households, including Nancy a 24-year-old woman who grew up without a father in adolescence, who got pregnant at an early age, and dropped out of high school. With the bio-psycho-social model there are some explanations as to why antisocial behavior is present with many family risk’s and very little, if any, protective factors. Why is Nancy relevant? Throughout this paper, Nancy’s life will be analyzed focusing on the social control theory, risk and protective factors that lead her through this life trajectory.…
Traditionally, most attempts to distinguish meaningful subgroups of children and adolescents with serious conduct problems (CPs) focused on variations, seriousness and frequency of conduct problems displayed by the child, level of aggression, age-of-onset, and presence of certain comorbid conditions such as ADHD. New approaches, however, are forging a new path that focuses on a child’s affective and interpersonal style, grouping together children presenting with both conduct problems and callous-unemotional traits (CP+CU), which may yield a developmental extension to the construct of psychopathy, and allow targeting of antisocial-behaviours early in life (Frick, Ray, Thornton, & Kahn, 2014). These children, to meet diagnostic-criteria for conduct disorder (CD) with the Limited Prosocial Emotions Specifier under DSM-5 criteria must display at least two or more specified characteristics, which can be a lack of remorse, guilt, empathy or concern about performance in important activities, or callousness, shallow or deficient affect, over at least twelve-months (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). Identifying this subgroup is critical in enhancing our understanding of and determining…
Megan Tripp De Robertis and Alan J. Litrownik (2004) conducted a study which was the first to report that there is also a relationship between parent disciplinary conducts and child aggression in foster parent homes and not only in biological family homes. This theory is also counterproductive because in some situations where children who come from harsh environments in biological family homes move into foster parent…
A large number of juveniles currently have criminal records and or are incarcerated within juvenile correction facilities. Some of these juveniles come from homes that one would consider as being very dysfunctional and others come from homes were one would consider those homes were the parents would seem to have everything together. The one things that all these juveniles have in common would be that they all have parents and or guardians that took a part in the way that the child was raised. These parents and guardians are the ones who were there when the child was born and were the first individuals who took parent in the education process for the child. One would want to believe that outside influences may have turned the child into being a juvenile delinquent, but where does the responsibility lay when the parent is supposed to mold their child into productive members of society.…
The child have been exposed to family violence in childhood are more than likely to abuse their own children. In addition, then amount of stress is another correlation with family and domestic violence. The use of drugs and alcohol are ways the abuser rationalize and excuse that enhances the actions of the abuser to cope with the stresses from past events, standards of living, economics, and poverty. (P. 312-313; Lamanna, Riedmann and…
Benish-Weisman, M. (2015). The interplay between values and aggression in adolescence: a longitudinal study. Developmental Psychology, doi:10.1037/dev0000015 This was a longitudinal study done on five Israel schools to test the previous theories that certain values can be correlated with aggression. Benish wanted to examine the relationship between values and aggression on a large sample of Israeli adolescents for a period of a year.…
The final symptom shown by this disorder is a serious violation of rules. This means going against the rules that their parents, teachers, or someone of higher authority have established for them. These behaviors include: running away, skipping class, playing pranks, or being sexually active at a very young age (“Mental Health,” 2015). In addition to all of these symptoms, people with conduct disorder may also have low self-esteem problems, abuse drugs or alcohol, throw temper tantrums, and are irritable. These people are unable to feel remorse or guilt for the hurtful behavior they have shown to others.…